7-letter words containing r, t, s
- barista — a person who makes and serves coffee in a coffee bar
- barotse — a member of a Negroid people of central Africa living chiefly in SW Zambia
- barrets — Plural form of barret.
- barstow — a city in S California.
- barters — Plural form of barter.
- barthes — Roland. 1915–80, French writer and critic, who applied structuralist theory to literature and popular culture: his books include Mythologies (1957) and Elements of Semiology (1964)
- bartsia — any of several species of semiparasitic scrophulariaceous plants, including red bartsia (Odontites verna), a pink-flowered weed of cornfields
- barytes — a colourless or white mineral consisting of barium sulphate in orthorhombic crystalline form, occurring in sedimentary rocks and with sulphide ores: a source of barium. Formula: BaSO4
- bastard — Bastard is an insulting word which some people use about a person, especially a man, who has behaved very badly.
- basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
- basters — Plural form of baster.
- bastrop — a city in N Louisiana.
- bathers — a swimming costume
- batters — Plural form of batter.
- bearest — (archaic) Second-person singular present simple form of 'bear'.
- beaters — Plural form of beater.
- becrust — to cover with crust
- bedrest — (medicine) confinement to bed in order to recover from an illness.
- besport — to amuse (oneself)
- bestorm — to assault
- bestrew — to scatter or lie scattered over (a surface)
- bestrid — to get or be astride of; have or place the legs on both sides of.
- bestrow — bestrew.
- bifrost — the rainbow bridge of the gods from their realm Asgard to earth
- bistort — a Eurasian polygonaceous plant, Polygonum bistorta, having leaf stipules fused to form a tube around the stem and a spike of small pink flowers
- bitters — bitter-tasting spirits of varying alcoholic content flavoured with plant extracts
- blaster — a sudden and violent gust of wind: Wintry blasts chilled us to the marrow.
- blister — A blister is a painful swelling on the surface of your skin. Blisters contain a clear liquid and are usually caused by heat or by something repeatedly rubbing your skin.
- bluster — If you say that someone is blustering, you mean that they are speaking aggressively but without authority, often because they are angry or offended.
- boaster — a chisel for boasting stone.
- bolster — If you bolster something such as someone's confidence or courage, you increase it.
- booster — A booster is something that increases a positive or desirable quality.
- borscht — a Russian and Polish soup based on beetroot
- borstal — In Britain in the past, a borstal was a kind of prison for young criminals, who were not old enough to be sent to ordinary prisons.
- bostryx — a type of cymose inflorescence normally affecting all flowers on one side of the rachis
- bradsot — braxy (def 1).
- bravest — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
- breaths — the air inhaled and exhaled in respiration.
- brights — the high beam of the headlights of a motor vehicle
- brisket — Brisket is a cut of beef that comes from the breast of the cow.
- brissot — Jacques-Pierre (ʒakpjɛr). 1754–93, French journalist and revolutionary; leader of the Girondists: executed by the Jacobins
- bristle — Bristles are the short hairs that grow on a man's chin after he has shaved. The hairs on the top of a man's head can also be called bristles when they are cut very short.
- bristly — Bristly hair is thick and rough.
- bristol — seaport in Avon, SW England: county district pop. 376,000
- bristow — Eric. born 1957, British darts player: world champion five times (1980–81, 1984–86)
- british — British means belonging or relating to the United Kingdom, or to its people or culture.
- brokest — a simple past tense of break.
- brutish — If you describe a person or their behaviour as brutish, you think that they are brutal and uncivilised.
- brutism — the characteristic actions of a brute
- bumster — (of trousers) cut low so as to reveal the top part of the buttocks